Cruiser Mk I
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Tank, Cruiser, Mk I (A9) | |
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Tank, Cruiser, Mk I (A9) |
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Type | Cruiser tank |
Place of origin | United Kingdom |
Specifications | |
Weight | 13 tonnes |
Length | 5.8 m |
Width | 2.5 m |
Height | 2.65 m |
Crew | 6 (Commander, gunner, loader, driver, 2x MG gunners) |
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Armour | 6 - 14 mm |
Primary armament |
QF 2-pdr 100 rounds |
Secondary armament |
3 x 0.303 Vickers MG 3,000 rounds |
Engine | AEC diesel 150 hp |
Power/weight | hp/tonne |
Suspension | Bogie |
Operational range |
241 km |
Speed | 40 km/h |
The Tank, Cruiser, Mk I (A9) was the first cruiser tank: a fast tank designed to bypass the main enemy lines and engage the enemy's lines of communication, along with enemy tanks.
Contents |
[edit] History and specifications
The A9 was developed by Sir John Carden of Vickers in 1934, intended to succeed the Vickers Medium Mark II. However, this was still in the time of the Great depression and the tank had a number of cost-cutting measures applied. It was the first British tank to have a centrally-located turret. It was poorly armoured, however, with a maximum of 14 mm thickness, many faces were vertical, and there were numerous shot traps.
The driver's compartment and the fighting compartments were not separated. As well as the turret armament, which consisted of a 2-pounder (40 mm) gun and a coaxial Vickers machine gun, there were two small turrets either side of the driver's compartment, each sporting one more machine-gun. Both these smaller turrets were permanently manned, which gave the tank a total crew of 6 (Commander, gunner, loader, driver and two machine-gunners).
The tank entered testing in 1936 and 125 were ordered in the summer of 1937, 75 were built by Harland and Wolff, and the other 50 were built by Vickers. Originally a Rolls-Royce car engine was used, but this proved underpowered and was replaced by an AEC bus engine.
The later Valentine tank essentially used the same lower hull and suspension, though with considerably more armour.
The A9 weighed 12 tons, was 5.8 metres long, 2.65 metres high, 2.5 metres wide, and had a top speed of 25mph on road and 15mph off. Its maximum road range was 150 miles. The ammunition load was 100 2-pounder rounds and a total of 3,000 rounds for the three Vickers machineguns.
[edit] Performance
The Cruiser was an effective tank in the French, Greek and early North African campaigns. The 2pdr gun was perfectly capable against German tanks. However the minimal armour meant it was easily shot to pieces. Also problematic was the lack of HE shells for the 2pdr gun and even worse the lack of HE for the 95mm gun on the Close Support version.
The mechanical reliability of the Cruiser was also a disadvantage. In particular, tracks were easily slewed causing difficulties.
[edit] Variants
Mark I (A9)
Used by the 1st Armoured Division in France. Used by the 2nd and 7th Armoured Divisions in North Africa until 1941.
Mark I CS
Had a 3.7" (94mm) howitzer installed in the turret. This gun only fired smoke rounds, 40 of which were carried.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
Light tanks | ||
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Vickers 6-Ton | Mk II | Mk III | Mk IV | Mk V | Mk VI | Mk VII Tetrarch | ||
Cruiser tanks | ||
Mk I | Mk II | Mk III | Mk IV | Mk V Covenanter | Mk VI Crusader | Mk VII Cavalier Mk VIII Centaur | Mk VIII Cromwell | Challenger | Comet | Sherman Firefly | Ram (Canada) | Sentinel (Australia) | ||
Infantry tanks | ||
Mk I Matilda | Mk II Matilda | Mk III Valentine | Mk IV Churchill |
Scout Cars |
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Daimler Dingo | Dingo Scout Car (Australia) | Humber Scout Car | Lynx Scout Car (Canada) | S1 Scout Car (Australia) |
Light Reconnaissance Cars |
Humber LRC | Morris LRC | Otter LRC (Canada) |
Armoured Cars |
AEC Armoured Car | Coventry Armoured Car | Daimler Armoured Car | Fox Armoured Car (Canada) Guy Armoured Car | Humber Armoured Car | Lanchester Armoured Car Marmon-Herrington Armoured Car (South Africa) | Morris CS9 | Rhino Heavy Armoured Car (Australia) | Rolls-Royce Armoured Car | Rover Light Armoured Car (Australia) | Standard Beaverette | Armoured Carrier Wheeled Indian Pattern (India) |
Armoured Trucks |
Bedford OXA | C15TA Armoured Truck (Canada) |
Armoured Command Vehicles |
AEC ACV | Guy Lizard ACV |
Avenger | Black Prince | Centurion | Excelsior | TOG 1 | TOG 2 Tortoise | Valiant | Harry Hopkins | Alecto | Thornycroft Bison |
Unarmoured vehicles |
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British armoured fighting vehicle production during World War II |
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